Well, I am happy to report that I think the T-amp does a more than acceptable job driving the HE-6. My set up for this test was Denon CDP digital out > Yulong D100 DAC > Ray Samuels Audio Stealth (as preamp) > T-Amp > HE-6. The T-Amp drives the HE-6 to much louder than I can stand with no distortion, and sounded really very good doing it. This is potentially an easy and inexpensive way to add a speaker-amp for driving the HE-6, and could potentially be driven right off of a source.

I was actually very impressed with this combo - much better than I expected. The sound is better off the speaker taps of the T-Amp than it was via the headphone out of any of my amps except the Leben. I'm going to have to try the HE-6 directly off of a Rotel 100 WPC power amp I have and see how that sounds.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Skylab
" Well, I am happy to report that I think the T-amp does a more than acceptable job driving the HE-6. My set up for this test was Denon CDP digital out > Yulong D100 DAC > Ray Samuels Audio Stealth (as preamp) > T-Amp > HE-6. The T-Amp drives the HE-6 to much louder than I can stand with no distortion, and sounded really very good doing it. This is potentially an easy and inexpensive way to add a speaker-amp for driving the HE-6, and could potentially be driven right off of a source.
I was actually very impressed with this combo - much better than I expected. The sound is better off the speaker taps of the T-Amp than it was via the headphone out of any of my amps except the Leben. I' m going to have to try the HE-6 directly off of a Rotel 100 WPC power amp I have and see how that sounds."

"Scotty, I need more power". That's what the HE-6 seems to always ask. LoL

For anybody interested Parts Express has the Dayton amps which are the same as the Sonic Impact for get this less than sixty bucks. Now this can may be viable for a reasonable setup with hardly any space requirement.The price is 44.80 with power supply.

Well, I am happy to report that I think the T-amp does a more than acceptable job driving the HE-6. My set up for this test was Denon CDP digital out > Yulong D100 DAC > Ray Samuels Audio Stealth (as preamp) > T-Amp > HE-6. The T-Amp drives the HE-6 to much louder than I can stand with no distortion, and sounded really very good doing it. This is potentially an easy and inexpensive way to add a speaker-amp for driving the HE-6, and could potentially be driven right off of a source.

I was actually very impressed with this combo - much better than I expected. The sound is better off the speaker taps of the T-Amp than it was via the headphone out of any of my amps except the Leben. I'm going to have to try the HE-6 directly off of a Rotel 100 WPC power amp I have and see how that sounds.

Well, I am happy to report that I think the T-amp does a more than acceptable job driving the HE-6. My set up for this test was Denon CDP digital out > Yulong D100 DAC > Ray Samuels Audio Stealth (as preamp) > T-Amp > HE-6. The T-Amp drives the HE-6 to much louder than I can stand with no distortion, and sounded really very good doing it. This is potentially an easy and inexpensive way to add a speaker-amp for driving the HE-6, and could potentially be driven right off of a source.

I was actually very impressed with this combo - much better than I expected. The sound is better off the speaker taps of the T-Amp than it was via the headphone out of any of my amps except the Leben. I'm going to have to try the HE-6 directly off of a Rotel 100 WPC power amp I have and see how that sounds.

Oh, it's not my favorite DAC either - my Audio By VanAlstine Fet- Valve DAC is considerably better, and I used that with the Leben when I tested the HE-6 at first. I used the D100 (which I think is good for the money) only when using the HE-6 with the T-Amp.

The HE-6 did sound good with the Rotel - maybe the best sound I got from them, although they sounded excellent with most of the amps I dared to try them with, in the end.

I was actually able to get MUCH better results with the Woo Audio WA2 than I expected. There was a tiny bit of fattening of the bass (slightly richer bass but with less good definition), and softening of the treble, versus the SS speaker amps or the Leben, but I actually found it fairly pleasant, and the WA2 had plenty of power - very loud for me was just at 1:00 on the volume control, with no signs at all of the onset of clipping, or even stress. The HE-6 and WA2 were a good combo, in spite of my initial hesitancy to even try that pairing.

Today (*right* on time for those scoring at home, since I got them last Friday), these will ship to Monsuierguzel. I don't have any clue when final production is planned, but as mentioned, I have told Fang I want to buy a pair (as far as I am aware, final pricing is still not set).

The HE-6 did sound good with the Rotel - maybe the best sound I got from them, although they sounded excellent with most of the amps I dared to try them with, in the end.

I was actually able to get MUCH better results with the Woo Audio WA2 than I expected. There was a tiny bit of fattening of the bass (slightly richer bass but with less good definition), and softening of the treble, versus the SS speaker amps or the Leben, but I actually found it fairly pleasant, and the WA2 had plenty of power - very loud for me was just at 1:00 on the volume control, with no signs at all of the onset of clipping, or even stress. The HE-6 and WA2 were a good combo, in spite of my initial hesitancy to even try that pairing.

Today (*right* on time for those scoring at home, since I got them last Friday), these will ship to Monsuierguzel. I don't have any clue when final production is planned, but as mentioned, I have told Fang I want to buy a pair (as far as I am aware, final pricing is still not set).

That is great news as they can handle a 100W amp. it just seems to me and you may recall as you once owned Maggies. The more power they get the better the sound. I look forward to my audition in about month.